
Malcolm X
(1992)He inspired many and frightened many. Often misunderstood, Malcolm X was one of the leading forces of the United States' Civil Rights Movement.

Crossing the Bridge: The Sound of Istanbul
(2005)Transcending cultural borders and genres, Istanbulâs vibrant music scene takes the spotlight in Fatih Akinâs sonically immersive time capsule, now remastered in 4K. Thumping with an infectious energy, this movable feast celebrates the bonding power of art over political and generational divides.

The Celluloid Closet
(1996)Featuring interviews with Hollywood luminaries, this film examines depictions of LGBTQ characters on the silver screen from the silent era onward.

The Girl with the Needle
(2024)Struggling to survive in post-WWI Copenhagen, a newly unemployed and pregnant young woman is taken in by a charismatic elder to help run an underground adoption agency. The two form an unexpected bond, until a sudden discovery changes everything.

The Settlers
(2023)Chile, 1901. Three horsemen embark on an expedition, tasked with securing a wealthy landownerâs vast property. Accompanying a British lieutenant and an American mercenary is mestizo marksman Segundo, who comes to realize their true mission is to violently âremoveâ the indigenous population.

Zama
(2017)In an ingenious adaptation of the existentialist novel Zama, Argentine auteur Lucrecia Martel inserts her own incisive commentary on colonialism and masculinity. Frenzied first-person narration transforms to become a cinematic fugue state in this singular and stupefying period drama.

Queer
(2024)1950. William Lee, an American expat in Mexico City, spends his days almost entirely alone, except for a few contacts with other members of the community. His encounter with Eugene Allerton, an expat former soldier, shows him that it might be finally possible to establish an intimate connection.

The Times of Harvey Milk
(1984)Made long before Gus Van Santâs acclaimed biopic, but only 6 years after Milkâs murder, this documentary builds on TV footage and interviews to trace the life of the activist. A historical document bearing witness to the simultaneous liberalization and rampant homophobia of 1970s San Francisco.

Grand Tour
(2024)Winner of the Best Director prize at Cannes, Miguel Gomesâs transcendent travelogue sets sail for spellbinding horizons, where romance and adventure thrillingly entwine. Guided by the capricious will of the heart, this epic tale of love on the run is a movable feast for the mind and the senses.

One Second
(2020)An act of communal restoration lies at the heart of this tragicomic epic from Zhang Yimou, a film which shares a spiritual kinship with the nostalgic classic Cinema Paradiso. A visually ravishing tale of triumph over adversity, One Second is a bittersweet ode to the magic of the silver screen.

High & Low â John Galliano
(2024)Reliving triumphs and controversies, fashion designer John Galliano takes center stage in this grippingly nuanced portrait from OscarÂŽ-winner Kevin Macdonald. Star-studded interviews and rare archival footage reveal the toxicity behind exquisite glamor and spectacle, both on and off the runway.

The Second Game
(2014)Corneliu Porumboiuâs minimalist doc might feel as simple as chatting during a match, yet he creates a super-charged situation where audiences come to dissect the hidden meaning lurking behind the images. A captivating look at Romanian history, father-son relationships, and football.

Witches
(2024)Witches are figures of solace in this intimate documentary, which unravels the social stigmas that women have endured across centuries. Between affecting interviews and vividly illustrative film clips, Elizabeth Sankey concocts a potion that brims with courage, compassion, and healing insight.

Eyes on the Prize III: We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015
A new installment of the landmark 1987 documentary series Eyes on the Prize.

Occupied City
(2023)Steve McQueenâs bravura documentary about the Nazi occupation of Amsterdam, an expansive meditation on memory, time, and where weâre headed.

State Funeral
(2019)What makes this film and Stalinâs funeral so fascinating is that we will never know how much of it was real and how much was staged. With the rise of âstrongâ leaders backed by heavy propaganda all over the world, this docu is a quiet and unbiased look at our past, and a mirror to our future. â VM

Blood of My Blood
(2015)Winner of the FIPRESCI award, this haunting portmanteau from director Marco Bellocchio is a shrewd social commentary steeped in striking gothic imagery. Set in a convent-prison, the film shifts from past to present, crafting a story that is a love letter to Italyâs past and a critique of its stasis.

Further Beyond
(2016)Ambrose O'Higgins' journey from Ireland to Chile in the 18th century.

Don't Expect Too Much
(2011)A personal, intimate documentary from Susan Ray, Donât Expect Too Much tells the inside story on one of Hollywoodâs greatest and most iconic directors: the inimitable auteur Nicholas Ray. Full of juicy revelations, it also features a roster of talking heads including Jim Jarmusch and Victor Erice!

Le Moulin
(2017)Poetry, literature, painting and old film clips converge in this lyrical, unusually designed film essay about Le Moulin, the Taiwanese poetsâ collective which protested in the 1930s against the cultural superiority of the Japanese occupier and the domination of realism in poetry.